Monday, January 13, 2020

2020 Deaths, Politics & Government


A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z  





— C —

Tom Coburn (age 72) - Coburn, a physician, was a three-term congressman and two-term U. S. Senator from Oklahoma; all as a Republican. Well known as a hard-line social and fiscal conservative, Coburn earned the sobriquet "Dr. No" for his sometimes unpopular stand on spending. A strong supporter of term limits, Coburn resigned in 2014 before completing his second term, ostensibly because of declining health. Affter leaving government, he worked with conservative activist groups. Coburn succumbed to prostate cancer on March 28, 2020.

Amadou Gon Coulibaly (age 61) - Coulibaly was the sitting Prime Minister of Ivory Coast (Côte d'Ivoire) at the time of his death, a position he had held since being chosen in 2017. At the time of his death, he was front-runner in his country's 2020 presidential election.  He had previously served as secretary general in the administration of the previous President, Alassane Ouattara. Coulibaly, who had undergone heart surgery in 2012, became ill and died July 8, 2020.

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— G —

John A. Gordon (age 73) - Gordon served in the U. S. Air Force from 1968 to 2000, rising to the rank of General. He retired to take the position of Deputy Director of the CIA under George W. Bush,. He also held the positions of head of the Nuclear Security Administration, Deputy NSA Advisor, and Homeland Security Advisor. General Gordon died April 19, 2020.

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— H —

Jane Hull (age 84) - Hull was an Arizona teacher turned politician, first elected as a state representative in 1978. In 1997 Hull assumed the governorship of the state upon the resignation of Fife Symington when the latter was convicted of fraud. Hull, at the time the Secretary of State, served out his term and was re-elected in 1998. Hull passed away April 16, 2020.

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— J —

Sam Johnson (age 89) - Johnson spent almost thirty years in the U. S. House as a Republican congressman from the Dallas area in Texas. He had been an Air Force pilot in both the Korean and Vietnam Wars. IN the second, he was captured by the North Vietnamese and held in the notorious Hanoi Hilton. Johnson retired after being re-elected in 2018. He died May 27, 2020.

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— M —

Ron Marlenee (age 84) - Marlenee, a Republican, was an eight-term Congressman from his native Montana. The rancher served in the House from 1977 until being ousted when forced to run against a sitting Democrat after the state lost one of its two seats in the House. Marlenee, dubbed one of the House's "Dirty Dozen" for his voting record on environmental legislation, died April 26, 2020.

Daniel arap Moi (age 95) - Moi was the second president of Kenya, following Jomo Kenyatta in 1978 and serving until being forced out of office in 2002. Although relatively stable, Moi's administration, like most administrations, was marked by corruption and graft, one reason that he was banned from running again in 2002. He died in Nairobi on February 4, 2020.

Mike Moore (age 71) - Moore was briefly the Prime Minister of New Zealand, filling in for 59 days in 1990. He retired from politics after reaching that pinnacle, after which he was the Director General of the WTO for three years and v=served as the New Zealand Ambassador to the USA from 2010 to 2015. Moore died February 2, 2020.

Hosni Mubarak (age 91) - Mubarak assumed the presidency in Egypt following the assassination of Anwar Sadat in 1981, holding that office continuously until he was deposed during the Arab Spring uprising in 2011. After leaving office, he was tried and sentenced to prison for the killing of protesters, a sentence that was nullified in a retrial. Mubrarak, visibly ill during his second trial, perished on February 25, 2020.

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— O —

Paul O'Neill (age 84) - O'Neill was  a businessman, at one time the CEO of Alcoa (Aluminum Corporation of America) and chair of the think tank RAND Corporation. He was tapped by the administration of George W. Bush to be Secretary of the Treasury, a position he held from January, 2001, to December, 2002. He was fired, allegedly for disagreeing with the invasion of Iraq, among other issues. O'Neill succumbed to lung cancer on April 18, 2020.

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— P —

Javier Pérez de Cuéllar (age 100) - The Peruvian Pérez de Cuéllar was a politician and diplomat vaulted to the position of Secretary-General of the United Nations in 1982, serving a two five-year terms as the fifth to hold the office. Back home in Peru, he ran unsuccessfully for national president in 1995 before rising to Prime Minister of the country in 2000. He received the Freedom Medal in 1992 and the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1991. Pérez de Cuéllar died March 4, 2020.

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— Q —

Qaboos bin Said Al Said (age 79) - The Sultan of Oman for almost 50 years, Qaboos assumed the position at a time when Oman little more than was a backwater state on the Persian Gulf. Though absolute ruler of his country, he was judged to be a benevolent despot and helped bring Oman into the modern world by leveraging the country's petroleum resources. He died January 10, 2020, leaving no direct heir.

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— S —


John Sears (age 79) - Sears was a Republican political strategist even before the days when they were called "spin doctors." He worked on political campaigns for Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, and was Nixon's Deputy Counsel before Watergate. In the '80s, Sears served as a lobbyist for the apartheid regime in South Africa. At one point he was misidentified as "deep throat," the source for the Washington Post exposé of the Nixon administration. Sears died March 26, 2020, of a heart attack.

Jay Severin (age 69) - Severin parlayed a twenty-year career as a Republican political consultant into a gig as a conservative AM radio talk-show host on Boston and New York stations. He was fired in Boston for a history racist statements about Muslims and Latinos and sexual innuendo about co-workers. He later spent four years as a commentator on Glenn Beck's "The Blaze" network. Severin died July 7, 2020, after a massive stroke.

Jean Kennedy Smith (age 92) - Smith, youngest sister of President John F. Kennedy, was a humanitarian and philanthropist. She founded Very Special Arts,  an international non-profit supporting the differently abled. In 1993, President Clinton appointed her U. S. Ambassador to Ireland, where she was instrumental in the peace process in Northern Ireland. President Obama awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011. Smith died June 17, 2020.

Pete Stark (age 88) - Stark, a banker by trade, was a Democratic U. S. Representative from California for twenty terms, lasting from 1973 to 2013. He was the only admitted atheist in Congress at the time of his retirement. He was known as a moderate, speaking out against the Iraq war and occasionally bucking the party bosses in the days when Congressmen still did that. Stark died January 24, 2020.

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— W —

Clayton Williams (age 90) - Williams, a Midland, Texas businessman, narrowly lost the 1990 Texas gubernatorial race to Ann Richards, thereby becoming the last Republican to lose a statewide race in the state. The oilman retired from politics after that loss, which many pundits blamed on his tone-deaf jokes and speeches.  Williams died February 14, 2020.

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Friday, January 10, 2020

2020 Deaths, Miscellaneous People


A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z



— A —

Bennie Adkins (age 86) - Adkins spent more than twenty years in the U. S. Army, risint to the rank of Command Sergeant Major before retiring in 1978. In 2013, Adkins was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions in a 1966 firefight in Vietnam. Adkins died from COVID-19 on April 17, 2020.

Philip Warren Anderson (age 96) - Anderson was a theoretical physicist and one-time professor at Cambridge and Princeton. He specialized in areas that led to the development of a theory of high-temperature superconductivity. He spend the early portion of his career at Bell Labs, where he developed much of the particle physics work that earned him a Nobel Prize in Physics in 1977. Anderson passed away March 28, 2020.

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— B —

Gregg Bemis (age 91) Bemis was a marine explorer and diver who, through a series of purchases and court battles, became the sole owner of the wreck of the RMS Lusitania. The wreck lies off the Irish coast near Kinsale Head. Bemis died of cancer on May 21, 2020.

Owen Bieber (age 90) - Bieber began working in the auto industry straight out of his Grand Rapids, Mich., high school. Within a few years, he became a shop steward and president of the UAW local, a position he held for several years. He began organizing for the union in the 1960s, and moved to the national organization. He rose through the UAW ranks, eventually becoming the president of the national UAW. He held the presidency from 1983 to 1995, a period during which unions in general lost membership and political power. Bieber died February 17, 2020.

Thomas Edward Blanton, Jr. (age 82) - In 2001, Blanton was convicted of murder in the 1963 bombing of a black church in Birmingham, Alabama. He and another man were the two remaining suspects out of four in the case, all members of the local Ku Klux Klan chapter, and were both sentenced to four consecutive life sentences. Blanton died in prison on June 26, 2020.

Brian Blume (age 70) - Blume partnered with Dungeons & Dragons developer Gary Gygax and another to form TSR in the 1970s. He helped writer some of the earliest add-ons and updates, although the company collapsed from internal struggles in the 1980s. He continued to work in the games industry, mainly in the White Wolf series. He died March 27, 2020, of a form of dementia.

David Owen Brooks (age 65) - Brooks, a native of Houston, was convicted of murder in 1975 as an accomplice of two other men. In all the three were alleged to have killed at least 28 men and boys in 1970-73. Brooks was sentenced to life in prison and died May 28, 2020.


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— C —

CC (age 18) - The domestic shorthair cat, whose name was short for "Carbon Copy" (or perhaps "CopyCat") was cloned by Texas A&M scientists in 2001. She managed to have a litter of four kittens of her own at age five, another first for cloned pets. She died of old age on March 3, 2020.

Jaime Carbonell (age 69) - Born in Uruguay, Carbonell studied at MIT before receiving a PhD in computer science from Yale. He was a professor of computer science at Carnegie-Mellon University with a specialization in machine learning and an interest in artificial intelligence. Carbonell died February 28, 2020.

Floyd Cardoz (age 59) - Born in Mumbai, Cardoz emigrated to the States by way of Europe and established himself as a chef in New York City. He competed on reality food shows "Top CHef" and "Top CHef Masters." Cardoz contracted COVID-19 on a trip to his native India and died in New Jersey on March 24, 2020.

Stanley Cohen (age 97) - Cohen was a biochemist who researched cellular growth factors during tenures at Washington and Vanderbilt Universities from 1953 to 1999. He shared the 1986 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine and a National Science Medal that same year with a colleague from Washington University. Cohen passed away February 5, 2020.

George Coyne (age 87) - Coyne answered two callings, first as a Jesuit priest and also as an astronomer. Using his Georgetosn PhD in astronomy, Coyne became the Vatican Astonomer at the same time he was a fellow of the University of Arizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory. COyne was an outspoken opponent of "intelligent design" who found no problem reconciling his scientific beliefs with his religion. He died February 11, 2020, of cancer.

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— D —

Freeman Dyson (age 96) - DYson may well have been one of the most prolific thinkers of his generation. A physicist and mathematician, Dyson contributed heavily to the fields of quantum dynamics, solid-state physics, and nuclear physics. He was also responsible for such concepts as the Dyson sphere (astronomy/science fiction), the Dyson series (mathematics), and the Dyson tree (botany/genetic engineering). He was professor emeritus at Princeton University at the time of his death, February 28, 2020.

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— E —

Ira Einhorn (age 79) - Einhorn's girlfriend disappeared in 1977, and he fled the country and hid in Europe for more than twenty years. After being returned to the US in 2000, he claimed that she had been assassinated by government agents. He was convicted and died in prison on April 3, 2020.

Scott Erskine (age 57 - Erskine was sentenced to death in 2003 for the killing of two boys aged nine and 13. He had already spent four years in prison during his late teens and twenties for rape and attempted rape. Court records say that, at age 10, Eskine had attempted to sodomize his six-year-old sister. He died in San Quentin prison July 3, 2020, of the COVID-19 virus.


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— F —

Barry Farber (age 90) - Farber was a nationally-syndicated radio talk-show host, the capstone to a career in radio that stretched across the second half of the twentieth century. He was still contributing to CRN Digital Talk Radio at his death. Farber was also adjunct professor of linguistics (he studied 25 different languages) at St. Johns and a one-time candidate for mayor of New York. Farber died May 6, 2020.

Lonnie "Grim Sleeper" Franklin (age 67) - Franklin was a serial killer convicted of ten murders and an attempted murder in California. His nickname arose from a fourteen-year "sleep period" in his crimes. Franklin was sentenced to death in 2016. On March 28, 2020, he was found dead in his cell at San Quentin.  

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— G —

Ed Genson (age 78) - Genson, a Chicago attorney, was well-known for representing high-profile clients in criminal and civil trials. Among those he defended are former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich, Chicago Sun-Times owner Conrad Black, and hip-hop musician R. Kelly. Genson died of cancer April 15, 2020.

Gerald Glenn (age 70) - Glenn, an evangelical Christian pastor, continued to hold services at his Richmond, Virginia, church in defiance of social-distancing orders by issued by state authorities. He continued to hold services until at least 22 March, 2020. Glenn died April 12, 2020, of COVID-19. According to news reports, his wife is also ill with the disease.

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— H —

Gale Halderman (age 87) - Halderman was a member of  the four-man team responsible for the initial design of Ford's iconic pony car, the Mustang. The model has sold over 10 million units in its more than 50-year run. Halderman passed away April 27, 2020, of liver cancer.

Mike Hughes (age 64) - "Mad Mike" Hughes played at the edge of fame for what normal people would consider his outrageous behavior. He first became famous for jumping a stretch limo, then building his own rocket. One would assume that someone who practices rocketry would be familiar with the shape of the Earth, but Hughes was a "flat-earther." Go figure. Hughes was killed in a stunt gone wrong on February 22, 2020.

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— J —
Wilson Roosevelt Jerman (age 91) - With a name combining the surnames of two  presidents, Jerman was almost type-cast for the job he held over a 45-year career, a staffer in the White House. In that time, he served in various roles from cleaner to butler under eleven presidents, from Eisenhower to Obama. Jerman died of COVID-19 on May 16, 2020.

Katherine Johnson (age 101) - Johnson, born Creola Coleman, displayed her mathematical acuity at an early age; eventually enrolling at a high school on a West Virginia college campus at age 10 and receiving a PhD in math at age 18. In the mid-1950s, Johnson was one of a group of woman who worked as "computers" in the aviation industry, eventually working for NASA. Her career, along with that of other women in the "colored computer" pool, was chronicled in the film Hidden Figures. Johnson died February 24, 2020.

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— K —
Donald Kennedy (age 88) - Kennedy, a biologist by training, began as a non-tenured professor at Stanford University in 1960. He rose through the ranks except for a hiatus as Head of the FDA during the Carter administration. After leaving the post, Kennedy returned to Stanford as provost, assuming the university presidency in 1980. He held that position until 1992. Kennedy was editor in chief of Science and remained professor emeritus at Stanford. He died of COVID-19 on April 21, 2020.

Peter Kirstein (age 86) - A computer scientist in the United Kingdom, Kirstein is credited with establishing some of the first internet-connected computer outside of the United States. In 1973, Kirstein's London laboratory connected to ARPANET via trans-Atlantic cable. He was also instrumental in developing the TCP/IP protocol by which computers communicate. Kirstein died January 8, 2019.

Sergei Kruschev (age 84) - The son of Soviet Premier Nikita Kruschev, Sergei was an engineer and sometime college professor. A naturalized American citizen, he taught at the Naval War College. Kruschev died of a gunshot wound, apparently self-inflicted, on June 19, 2020.

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— L —

Mary Kay Letournea (age 58) - Letourneau, a former schoolteacher, was convicted in 1997 of molesting a former student, 13-year-old Samoan-born Vili Fulaau. After serving a 3-month prison sentence and being paroled, she was caught with Fulaau again. Two daughters resulted from their... mating, the second of whom was born in prison. After her release in 2005, she married Fulaau. Letournau died of colon cancer July 6, 2020.

Robert Levinson (age 72) - Levinson, a one-time agent of the DEA and FBI, disappeared in Iran in 2007 while working for the CIA. His death was communicated to members of his family on March 24, 2020. Further details are, however, unknown, including the date, manner, and location of his death.

Joseph Lowery (age 98) - Lowery was a towering figure in the civil rights movement, a Methodist minister who co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference with MLK and others. He sereved as the SCLC's vice president, president, and board chairman. He gave the benediction at President Obama's first inauguration in 2009, and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Obama later that year. Lowery died March 27, 2020.


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— M —

Dee Molenaar (age 102) - Molenaar was a WW2 veteran, serving in the U. S. Coast Guard. After the war, he earned a geology degree and joined the U. S. Geological Survey. He is a member of the Hall of Mountaineering Excellence, earning that honor for multiple first ascents, including K2 and Mount St. Elias, and dozens of ascents of Mt. Rainier. Molenaar died January 19, 2020.

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— N —

Ray Norris (age 72) - Ray Norris and Larry Bittaker (Died 2019) were convicted in 1981 of serial rape, kidnapping, and murder for a series of crimes the two committed in 1979. Because of their use of houshold tools to torture and kill their victims, the two were known in the press as the Tool Box Killers. Norriswas on death row in San Quentin when he died on February 24, 2020

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— O —

Teruyuki Okazaki (age 88) - Okazaki, a ju-dan black belt in Shotokan Karate, was the founder of the International Shotokan Federation. He came to North America in the early 1960s to spread the style to the western hemisphere. In addition to his Philadelphia dojo, Okazaki also held faculty positions at Temple University and other colleges in Pennsylvania. Okazaki died April 21, 2020, of COVID-19.

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— P —

Darrin Patrick (age 49) - Patrick founded The Journey, a St. Louis-based megachurch, in 2002; and was its lead pastor until he was removed from the ministry in 2016. After a "restoration process," he re-entered the ministry as an associate of Seacoast Church in 2017. Patrick died of what appears to have been a self-inflicted gunshot wound on May 7, 2020.

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— R —

Reckful (age 31) - Byron Bernstein, aka "Reckful," was a Twitch streamer and a professional eSports player best known as a master of World of Warcraft. He was also a low-level professional poker player. Like his older brother before him, the Israeli-American Bernstein committed suicide, dying July 2, 2020.

Rubble (age 32) - Rubble, a resident of Exeter in England, was born May 5, 1988. That wouldn't be so interesting if he were human, but Rubble was a domestic feline; certified by Guinness as the oldest living cat. The Maine coon cat's death was announced July 3, 2020.

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— S —

Saturn (age 83?) - Saturn, an American-born alligator, was a resident of the Berlin Zoological Garden and a favorite of Adolf Hitler. Although the zoo was destroyed by Allied bombing, Saturn survived and was moved to Moscow. He died of old age May 22, 2020.

Ronald Shurer (age 41) - Shurer was awarded the Medal of Honor in 2018 for his actions during a battle in Afghanistan in 2008. The former Special Forces medic became a Secret Service agent after leaving the army. He was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2017 and succumbed to the disease on May 14, 2020.

Emidio Soltsyk (age 44) - "Mimi" Soltsyk was a California socialist - the real thing, not a Bernie Sanders Social Democrat - who ran for U. S. President on the Socialist ticket in 2016, receiving less than 3,000 votes nationwide. . He also ran for state assemblyman in California in 2016. Soltsyk died of liver cancer June 28, 2020.

Bert Sutherland (age 83) - Sutherland was one of the earliest computer scientists to help shepherd society into the "information age." Among his accomplishments are having managed three major laboratories, including Sun Microsystems and the consortium that developed ARPANET, the forerunner of the internet. At Xerox, he was in charge of the division that developed the first personal computer, the Alto. Sutherland died February 18, 2020.

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— T —

Larry Tesler (age 74) - Although his name remains unknown to the vast majority of people, Tesler's contributions to the information age are immeasurable: he's the guy who invented cut, copy, and paste for the computer interface. This breakthrough took place at Xerox, the company from which Steve Jobs copied most of "his ideas" for Apple. Tesler later worked for Apple. He passed away February 16, 2020.

Linda Tripp (age 70) - Tripp was a White House employee in the George H. W. Bush administration who remained on the job after the Clinton transition. She was moved to the Pentagon in 1994, where she met and befriended a White House intern named Monica Lewinsky. She secretly recorded telephone conversations between Lewinsky and Clinton, which she later turned over to Kenneth Starr during the impeachment process. Tripp died of pancreatic cancer April 8, 2020.

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— V —

Antonio Veciana (age 91) - The Cuban-born Veciana was an accountant in his native country when he was recruited by the CIA in a plot to kill newly-installed president Fidel Castro after the Bay of Pigs invasion failed. Veciana fled Havana in 1961, settling in Miami where he founded a fiercely anti-Castro group, Alpha 66.  He died June 18, 2020, in Miami.
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— W —

Rosalind P. Walter (age 95) - Born Rosalind Palmer, Rosalind went to work in an aircraft factory straight out of high school, assembling fighter planes for the war effort. She is said to have inspired the hit 1942 song "Rosie the Riveter." In later life, Walter was an advocate for public broadcasting and a trustee of the Tennis Hall of Fame. Walter died March 4, 2020.

Robert Weighton (age 112) - At his death on May 28, 2020. the Englishman was the oldest living person. He was born in 1908 and lived through two world wars and the Spanish Influenza. He died of cancer.

Jack Whittaker (age 72) - At the time a construction worker, Jack Whittaker won almost $$315 million in a 2002 PowerBall lottery game. His good luck, however, did not guarantee happiness.  Whittaker's life was... troubled, including association with drug overdoses, lawsuits, a DUI, and the death of his granddaughter. Whittaker died June 27, 2020.

Oliver E. Williamson (age 87) - Williamson was Professor Emeritus of economics in the Edgar F. Kaiser chair at Cal Berkeley. He had previously taught at University of Pennsylvania and Yale. He shared the 2009 Nobel Prize in Economics with Elinor Ostrom. Williamson died of pneumonia on May 21, 2020.

Al Worden (age 88) - Worden was the command module pilot during the lunar mission known as Apollo 15, orbiting the moon while fellow astronauts David Scott and James Irwin went to the surface in 1971. He lost a congressional race from Pennsylvania in 1982 and published m=his memoir in 2011. Col. Worden died March 17, 2020.

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— Z —

Greg Zanis (age 69) - Zanis, by trade a carpenter, began building and installing crosses in memory of the victims of gunshot deaths. He is said to have built, delivered, and installed more than 26,000 crosses; recording his work in a handwritten ledger. Zanis succumbed to bladder cancer May 4, 2020, after arranging for a Lutheran charity to continue his mission.

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Wednesday, January 8, 2020

2020 Deaths, Arts & Letters


A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z  



— A —

Peter Alexander (age 81) - Alexander was a sculptor, part of Southern California's "Light and Space" movement during the 1960s. His early medium was resin, often translucent. His sculptures have appeared in several films. Alexander stopped sculpting with resin for more than thirty years, during which he painted. His work is shown in galleries and one of his murals is on display at teh Walt Disney Concert Hall. Alexander died May 26, 2020.


Rudolfo Anaya (age 82) - Best known for his Chicano coming-of-age novel  Bless Me, Ultima, Anaya was a native new Mexican who stayed in Albuquerque to teach at the University of New Mexico. Besides Ultima, which has been published in both Spanish (Benediceme, Ultima) and English, Anaya also wrote a series of mysteries about Latino private eye Sonny Baca. Anaya died June 28, 2020, after a long illness.

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— B —

Stanley Bing (age 68) - Bing, real name Gil Schwartz, split his time between two careers, that of an executive for CBS (VP of corporate communications) and a writer and humorist. In that latter vocation, Bing wrote for Esquire and Fortune magazines for a total of thirty years, chiefly business writing and satire of the business and political worlds. He published thirteen books. Bing died of a heart attack on May 2, 2020.

Patricia Bosworth (age 87) - Bosworth, born Patricia Crum, began modeling in college and segued to the stage. In the '50s and '60s, she had a brief career as an actress, appearing on television and in film (her most famous role was in the Audrey Hepburn vehicle, The Nun's Story). In the 1960s, she became a journalist and author, wiring tor Vanity Fair and editing Screen Stars. She wrote several biographies, including Montgomery Cift, Marlon Brando, Jane Fonda, and Diane Arbus. Bosworth died of the COVID-19 virus on April 2, 2020.

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— C —

Laura Caldwell (age 52) - While being a trial lawyer and a law professor at Loyola of Chicago, Laura Caldwell also found the time to pen two non-fiction books and fourteen mystery novels. She was a dedicated friend of the wrongfully convicted, as evidenced by the organization she founded, Life After Innocence. Caldwell succumbed to breast cancer on March 1, 2020.

Mary Higgins Clark (age 92) - Clark was probably best known as an author of mystery novels, with more than 50 standalone novels published since 1968, as well as mystery series, plays, and television scripts. KNown as "the Queen of Suspense," Clark not only won writing awards but has one named after her, the Mary Higgins Clark Award. Clark died January 31, 2020.

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— D —

Tomie dePaola (age 85) - dePaola was a beloved children's author and illustrator and a media figure, known for his Strega Nona series and his hundreds of "legends, folktales, and stories." He was nominated for the Hans Christian Andersen Award in 1990 and was a multiple runner-up for the Caldecott and Newberry awards. He appeared multiple times on "Barney and Friends" and had his own television series, "Telling Stories with Tomie dePaola." He died March 30, 2020, of complications from a fall.

Mort Drucker (age 91) - Drucker was a cartoonist and caricaturist. His best-known works are most certainly the  satirical drawings he published in "Mad Magazine" for more than fifty years. Drucker also illustrated film posters, coloring books, and at least one comic strip ("Benchley"). He was a multiple award winner in the field of comics, including a Reuben Award and induction into the National Cartoonists Society Hall of Fame. Drucker died April 8, 2020.

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— F —

Bruce Jay Friedman (age 90) - Friedman wrote novels, plays, and screenplays; with a special emphasis on dark humor in a deadpan voice. He was most active in the early mid-century, including the screenplays for The Heartbreak Kid and Stir Crazy. He also published several novels and short-story collections, as well as non-fiction. Friedman died June 3, 2020.

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— G —

Milton Glaser (age 91) - Glaser was best known as a graphic designer who designed the logos for many well-known entities, including DC Comics, Stony Brook University, and a psychedelic Bob Dylan album cover. His best-known work is undoubtedly the logo I  NY, which he designed in the 1970s. Glaser also teamed up with a friend to found New York magazine, and created his own font, Glaser Stencil. He died on his 91st birthday, June 26, 2020.

Glenna Goodacre (age 80) - Goodacre was a sculptor and artist-in-residence in Santa Fe, the mother of model/actress Jill Goodacre and mother-in-law of Harry Connick, Jr. Among Goodacre'd best-known works are the Vietnam Women's Memorial in Washington, DC, and the face of Sacagewa on the dollar coin. Goodacre passed away April 13, 2020.

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— H —

A. E. Hotchner (age 102) - Hotchner was a novelist, biographer, and playwright; best known for biographies of Doris Day and Ernest Hemingway. He wrote the screenplay for King of the Hill and television treatements of "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" and "The Fifth Column." In 1982, Hotchner and his friend and neighbor, Paul Newman, founded the food company Newman's Own. All profits from the company's sales go to charity. Hotchner died February 15, 2020.

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— J —

John Seward Johnson II (age 89) - Johnson, grandson of a founder of Johnson & Johnson, was a sculptor who specialized in bronzes of people taking part in ordinary activities. His works include a "retelling" of the famous V-J Day photograph ("Unconditional Surrender") and a bronze hitchhiker "leaving" Hofstra University. Johnson was the cousin of actor Michael Douglas, whose mother was Johnson's mother's sister. Johnson died March 10, 2020.

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— K —

Roger Kahn (age 92) - Kahn was a newspaper reporter  in New York, covering the Brookly Dodgers. He rose through journalistic ranks to become sports editor at Newsweek and an editor at large for the Saturday Evening Post. In 1972 he published his biggest hit, the baseball-slash-male bonding book The Boys of Summer, named by Sports Illustrated as one of the best sports books of all time. Kahn passed away February 6, 2020.

Nick Kotz (age 87) - Nathan "Nick" Kotz was an journalist and author specializing in politcal science. He is best known for his book about the personalities involved in the passage of the civil rights laws in the 1960s, in particular President Johnson and the Reverend King. Kotz was killed in a freak auto accident on April 26, 2020.

Larry Kramer (age 84) - Kramer was a playwright and public health advocate, known mainly for founding the gay-rights organization Act Up in the 1980s to focus attention on the AIDS epidemic. He was a two-time Obie Award winner and a finalist for the 1992 Pulitzer Prize for drama. Kramer died of pneumonia May 27, 2020.

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— M —

Michael McClure (age 87) - McClure was a multi-talented wordsmith; writing reportage, poetry, plays, novels, and song lyrics. He first became famous as a Beat Generation poet who hung around with Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac. He also appeared in a handful of films. McClure passed away after a stroke on May 4, 2020.

Ron McLarty (age 72) - McLarty may be familiar to fans of the '70s tlevision show "Spenser for Hire," where he played a Boston homicide cop. His voice, however, is more familiar to many fans of audiobooks for his narration of novels by such writers as David Baldacci and Danielle Steele. He even wrote (an narrated) his own novels, beginning with 2004's The Memory of Running. McLarty succumbed to dementia on February 8, 2020.

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— P —

David Perlman (age 101) - Perlman was a long-time journalist for the San Francisco Chronicle who took over the newspaper's science reporting in 1957. He remained with the Chronicle throughout his career, becoming science editor emeritus at the age of 98. The American Geological Union created an award in his honor in 2000, and he received awards from multiple societies and the USGS. Perlman died June 19, 2020.

Charles Portis (age 86) - Portis is probably best known as the author of True Grit, the western novel made into a motion picture - twice - as well as a sequel and a made-for-TV sequel. He also wrote Norwood, which was likewise made into a movie, albeit. more modern.  He was renowned as a chronicler of the American west and south and for his at times deadpan humor. Portis expired February 17, 2020.


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— R —

Richard Reeves (age 83) - Reeves was a writer,  a syndicated columnist for the UPI, and a travel writer for Travel and Leisure. He published some twenty non-fiction books, mainly on presidential politics. Over the years, Reeves collected a Peabody Award (984) an Emmy Award (1980), and the Lifetime Achievement Award from his fellow newspaper columnists. He died of heart failure on March 25, 2020.

Mike Resnick (age 77) - Resnick's long and varied career included stints as a writer and editor of "adult" material and a couple of movie scripts, but his first love and his main genre were fantasy and science fiction. Resnick holds the unofficial record for Hugo Award nominations at 37, with a total of five winners. Resnick died January 9, 2020.

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— S —

Matty Simmons (age 93) - Simmons, the one-time executive VP of Diner's Club, sidestepped into media as the CEO of Twenty-First Century Communications. He and a friend created the company to publish a humor magazine that eventually led to National Lampoon. The company also produced such films as Animal House and the National Lampoon franchise of comedies. Simmons passed away April 29, 2020.

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— W —

Charles Webb (age 81) - Webb was a novelist with some nine titles to his name. His second most famous might have been The Marriage of a Young Stockbroker, but few who survived the sixties will forget his most famous work, The Graduate. Despite the success of his novel and the film based on it, Webb lived a blue-collar life working low-wage jobs. He died June 16, 2020.

Elizabeth Wurtzel (age 52) - Wurtzel was a lawyer and writer, famous for her suffering from depression throughout her teenage years and twenties, a period detailed in her memoir Prozac Nation. Her career both as author and lawyer were marred by controversy, including charges of fabricating sources. She died January 7, 2020, of breast cancer.

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